Quick Specs

Editors' Review

We use a Windows machine for work and a Mac for pleasure, and one thing we love about our Mac is the dock. This strip across the bottom of our screen contains shortcuts to all our favorite applications, documents, and folders, giving us quick access to the things we use the most. LaunchBar Commander is a similar utility for Windows, and although it doesn't have the sleek interface or animations of the Mac dock, it works just as well at keeping our favorite things handy.

LaunchBar Commander has a plain interface, just a skinnable gray strip that can be docked at either the top or the left side of the screen. Adding an application or folder is as easy as dragging and dropping it onto the program's interface, although there's also a customization menu that gives more advanced users plenty of tools for specifying exactly how items on the dock appear and function. Users can create multiple docks with different nodes in them, which is not an entirely intuitive process; there are a lot of menu options, and the built-in Help file isn't as thorough as it could be. Users who aren't particularly computer literate will probably have some difficulty getting the hang of this process, but they'll be fine if they stick to the basic dragging and dropping functions. The dock itself works just fine; it quickly launched the folders and programs we added to it, and we appreciated the autohide feature that kept it out of our way until we needed it. Overall, we liked LaunchBar Commander, although we suspect that there are similar programs that are a little easier to use.

LaunchBar Commander comes as a ZIP file. It installs politely but leaves a folder behind upon removal. We recommend this program to all users.

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Publisher's Description

LaunchBar Commander is an application launcher, which is typically docked on the side of your screen and lets you configure buttons and menus which will launch your favorites programs.
You can choose some nice appearance skins for the program. Fancy animated mac-style dock with dancing icons. It's also designed to store docking bar configurations in self-contained files so you can back them up easily move them to other computers switch between configurations. It emphasizes the use of highly configurable menus rather than just buttons. You can build hierarchical menus of any depth and varying types.

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